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Sign this [new] petition for The White House to increase the NIH budget for 2013

[UPDATE (April 2, 2012): We now need 9,333 more signatures to hit 25,000 by April 17. If you have not yet signed the petition, please do so, and ask your friends and co-workers to log into the site and sign.]

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A new petition has been initiated (the first one failed by just 88 signatures!), and needs 25,000 signatures by April 17, 2012. As of this date (March 25), it is more than halfway there at 12,574.

The original petition needed 25,000 signatures by March 18th. It fell short by just 88 signatures!

The new announcement is below. The original petition announcement, with arguments for its support, is below that. ~ Mike

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There is a petition to the White House to increase the NIH budget for FY 2013. This petition was started by Steve Metzler at Johns Hopkins.

The current White House proposal calls for a flat NIH budget. After factoring in inflation, flat funding is an equivalent of a funding cut. Research is already heavily under duress, with NIH funding rates at a record low. This petition provides a unique opportunity to gain the attention of the White House. If the petition receives 25,000 signatures by [April 17th], the White House will review it. Currently there are over [12,500] signatures.

You will need to create a White House account (something all of you want to do anyway). This takes about 3 minutes. [Please be persistent ~ Mike] After you create your account, log on and sign the petition. Please consider passing this along to other investigators.

The term “Payline” in research means the cut-off point below which a grant proposal will not be considered for funding. At one time, the payline for good research proposals was 25% of submissions.

The payline is now barely 10%. That’s a reduction of about 60% since the turn of the century.

I have always been a fan and advocate for scientific research, but now it’s also personal. My wife does research in the areas of diabetes, metabolic syndrome, and obesity. As a result, I’ve learned a lot more about how one applies for grants: the preliminary work, the writing, the many weeks that go into assembling a good research proposal. And the heartbreak of being denied funding for a proposal which ranks even in the top 10-20%

At a payline of 25%, grant submissions are a competition among the best and most promising ideas. At 10%, they’re little better than a lottery.

Support bettering human health and improving our economy! Sign this petition to support increasing funding for the National Institutes of Health:

[deleted]

I am writing because I wanted to bring your attention to a petition (see link below) started at WhiteHouse.gov by our colleague Dr. Steve Meltzer at Johns Hopkins that calls for an increase for the NIH budget. As you know, the President recently announced his proposed FY2013 budget, which called for a flat NIH budget. After factoring in inflation, flat funding is an equivalent of a funding cut. Research by biomedical community is already heavily stressed, with NIH funding rates at a record low. I thought you would be interested in supporting this petition, which provides a unique opportunity to gain the attention of the White House. If the petition receives 25,000 signatures by March 18th, the White House will review it. We currently have over 13,000 signatures.

These are troubling times for the research community and medical progress is at great risk. Investigators, their institutions, Private research funding organizations, patient advocate groups, and the biotech/pharma sector all have a common goal – the betterment of human health. NIH funding is a critical component for the biomedical research pipeline and increasing funding for the NIH should be a goal we can all work together on. Please help us in this endeavor and sign and share this petition with your friends, family, and colleagues. If possible, do you think you could send this out to your colleagues?

About Thinkwing Radio

Mike Honig is originally from Brooklyn, New York. He moved to Houston in September of 1977 and has been there ever since. Mike's interests are politics, history, science, science fiction (and reading generally), technology, and almost anything else. Mike has knowledge and experience in many diverse fields, sometimes from having worked in them, and sometimes from extensive reading or discussion about them. Mike's general knowledge makes him a favorite partner in Trivial Pursuit. He likes to say that about most things, he knows enough to be dangerous. Humility is a work-in-progress.